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About Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 10, 1973)
emerald classifiedsl JANE DONALD wmkPo «/udieilond in an alan j pakula production I Of»o»nol souocJtrock QvO'ioWs on worner bfOS records ■Mute I \T COLE'S ...to help yaw start the term... Art and Architecture SUPPLIES AT A BIG ONE WEEK DISCOUNT miill. JANUARY 13th CnoObE FROM THE MOST COMPLETE SELECTION IN THE NORTHWEST - JUST SHOW STUDENT OR FACULTY I.D. CARD BEFORE CASH PUPCHASE (of si.to or more) stock up during our ifUUBLE DISCOUNT DATS and save 20 per cent , off our regular prices! S3S EAST ELEVENTN Just a few blocks, on your way downtown Free Parking at Rear-Bike Rack at Front Faculty considers ROTC again today The University faculty is still considering the future of ROTC on campus. For the fourth straight monthly meeting, the general faculty will have questions dealing with the military program on its agenda when it convenes at 3:30 p.m. today in 150 Science. Today’s agenda includes discussion of the Majority Report — the last of three proposals concerning ROTC which were brought before the faculty at the beginning of fall term, 1972. The Majority Report, a motion in 14 parts prepared by the Standing ROTC Advisory Committee, recommends the addition of three credit non ROTC courses to the requirec ROTC curriculum, reim bursement by the military for University ROTC costs, and the creation of a “War and Peace Studies” curriculum. The two ROTC motions voted down by the faculty at the Oc tober and November faculty meetings respectively include a motion to terminate ROTC on campus and the Minority Report which advocated non-credit ROTC courses and a withdrawal of faculty status for ROTC per sonnel (except the Heads of the Army and Air Force ROTC programs). Pollution hearing set The Lane Regional Air Pollution Authority (LRAPA) will hold a public hearing on Lane County air pollution sources beginning at 8 a.m. today in the McNutt Room of the Eugene City Hall. Vern Adkison, director of LRAPA, said “the hearing is in accord with the Federal Clean Air Act regulations which stipulates that we (LRAPA) survey industry and hold a public hearing on their compliance schedules.” The hearing will consist of the reading of compliance schedules of all agencies in Lane County that are bong brought under compliance. “Some of the schedules call for compliance as far away as 1975,” he said. Adkison called the hearing “a major one because there is a new series of ordinances out that must be complied with.” Schedules that are given the go ahead by the LRAPA will be sent on to the state Department of Environmental Quality and from there to the federal En vironmental Protection Agency. Any schedules not okayed will be assigned a separate hearing. Tht Ortfon DaHy EtncraM to pllllliid Miy ilKp ffMay Ifca scfMtoi yMr« axctpt PyriaQ txam aM vscifiaa psristtt# -j fii, _r«nl , ~J»f liaiuMaMw ii •■•iwiHiii *i Hi uni ik wiy k unpni. StCtnd CllM'(MNllfP'plM St RllflMi OvtflQf fMII. ASUO and the inwriM ana the at these utoerdNiw t» (11) Special subscript* are available at a rale at SI*At par SLN par year. The ratal (1) S3.SO par term. 'Lcs.a. Sound expert to speak. A leading authority on the relationships between the art of music nd tesSSce «f «2d. Edward TatnaU P"**"1 ■ *«* public lecture-demonstration •tihertw» II nf n Canby’s appearance is part of the Festival of Arts at the U of O, which has as its theme “Two Visions: Science and Art. He will speak on the topic “Toward One Culture at 8 p.m., in the Recital Hall of the School of Music. .. cJrnby is associate editor of Audio magazine, for whteh he 1ms written record reviews and articles on the relations between hi fl and music for more than 25 y®*1*- ftp” His radio program in the New York area, Recordings, E.T.C. has been prosS weekly for 25 yearo. It cmn^ commentary on recorded music with illustrative tape-edited ‘phonomoutages, comparing recordings. _ He directs the New York Canby Singers a group of some 20 singers who perform a cappella music from the Renaissance to the modern periodin concerts throughout the New York area and on reC°Canby has provided experimental sound tracks for three ex composer himself and began his career as a music in structor at Princeton. Irish-American feminist to talk Rita Moran, an Insh-American feminist who has done extensive research on the conflict in Ireland, will speak at the University today. Moran is a longtime activist in the women’s liberation and antiwar movements. She was a founding member of Female Liberation at Berkeley. In 1970, she went on a fact finding tour of Ireland and more recently conducted interviews visiting leaders of the Irish Republican movement. The speech will begin at 8 p.m in the EMU Dad’s Roam. Hie public is invited and there is no admission. The speech is spons^wri bv the ASUO Cultural Forum. Environmental courses listed The Environmental Studies Center has prepared a listing of all environmentally related courses offered winter term 1973 through the University and the Division of Continuing Education. A copy can be picked up at the center office, 11 PLC. Art exhibits shown throughout state Five exhibitions from the University Museum of Art will be shown in Oregon communities during the next month. Statewide Services, a division of the Art Museum, Bends out these pre-packaged art exhibitions to Oregon communities. Ite division presently has some 40 different exhibitions available. In Eugene, an exhibit entitled “University Printmakers,” which is a combination of works by University of Oregon students, is on display in the art department gallery through Jan. 15. In Salem, “Pinhole Photography’’ by James Shull is showing through Jan. 17 at Willamette University, where “The Figure” by Branson Stevenson will be exhibited Jan. 19 through Feb. 28. At Linn-Ben ton Community College in Albany, a combination of woodcut, etching and collograph by Oregon artist Jack McLarty will be on display through Feb. 2. The show “Nostalgia U.S.A.” will be up Jan. 2 through Feb. 5 at the Oregon College of Education College Center in Monmouth. Hie show is a collection of Works Progress Administration (WPA) works through from the 1930s. In Baker at the Crossroads Center will be “Collages” by Mark Clarke through Feb. 2. [ Community Peace groups on American Circus Local peace groups will discuss their plans to protest the con tinuation of the Vietnam War tonight on the American Circus heard on radio station KZEL-FM (96.1). The show, which is hosted by Grattan Kerans and is broadcast live from the Bavarian Restaurant, begins at 7 p.m. Canadian foiksinger to anpear Canadian folksinger Vera Johnson will appear at 7:30 p.m. Thursday night at the Unitarian Church, 40th and Donald Streets. Johnson, who has been involved in the women’s movement for nearly a half a century, is being sponsored by the Family Counseling Services of Lane County. Donations for the concert are $1.00 a person. Y oga seminar scheduled A seminar io introduce students to the age-old practice of yoga *111 be held at 8 p.m. tonight at 470 East 11th St. The seminar is sponsored by People to People.